Cover image of show BlueBird on Your Shoulder

BlueBird on Your Shoulder

Podcast by BlueBird on your Shoulder

English

News & politics

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About BlueBird on Your Shoulder

This is not a news recap. This is what happens when you strip the narrative away and look at the damage underneath.Every week we break down leadership, decisions, and the consequences no one wants to own. The incompetence, the contradictions, and the moments where systems start to fail in real time.No spin. No protection. No pretending this is normal.Just a clear look at power, how it is being used, and what it is costing.

All episodes

60 episodes

episode We Counted the Bodies While They Managed the Narrative artwork

We Counted the Bodies While They Managed the Narrative

The conversation moves from fears around Ebola exposure and mysterious deaths into something much darker: a growing belief that institutions no longer function honestly, only narratively. The hosts dissect Trump’s proposed $1.8 billion “anti weaponization” settlement fund, the expanding conflict around Iran and Israel, the collapse of public trust in elections and higher education, and the Democratic Party’s own autopsy of the Harris campaign. What starts as political commentary slowly becomes something more existential. Gaza casualty numbers are compared against some of history’s darkest conflicts. Economic messaging collides with lived reality. Conspiracy theories, institutional decay, and cultural exhaustion blur together into a single recurring theme: people no longer believe the systems around them are telling the truth. Underneath the sarcasm and dark humor is a growing fatigue with nonstop crisis, nonstop outrage, and a world that increasingly feels unstable while powerful people insist everything is fine. 00:00 Cold open chaos and accidental live recording 05:00 Mysterious death rumors and Ebola fears 09:00 Trump’s $1.8 billion “anti weaponization” settlement 13:00 Senate resistance and fractures inside the GOP 20:00 Democrats release the Harris campaign autopsy 26:00 Why the Democrats lost young voters and Latino support 32:00 Economic messaging versus lived reality 35:00 Israel, Gaza, and the collapse of public support 39:00 Conspiracies, 9/11 questions, and institutional distrust 43:00 Universities become political battlegrounds 46:00 Crypto, fintech, and the future of political money 49:00 Iran tensions and fears of economic fallout 53:00 Gaza death toll comparisons and historical context 01:02:00 Endless war, propaganda, and political exhaustion 01:07:00 Burnout, breaking points, and the future of the podcast

22 May 2026 - 1 h 8 min
episode Empires Don’t Admit They’re Dying Even When the Decline Is Televised artwork

Empires Don’t Admit They’re Dying Even When the Decline Is Televised

China publicly pressures the United States over Taiwan, global trade power shifts further east, and the cracks inside the American economy become harder to ignore. This week, we break down Trump’s meeting in China, the growing perception of American decline, tariff fallout, weakening GDP, rising energy costs, and why the world increasingly sees the United States as a fading empire still pretending to lead. We also examine the political instability building underneath the surface: ICE shakeups, voting rights battles in the South, Project 2025, the fight over interest rates, and the growing tension between loyalty politics and constitutional limits. Then the conversation turns outward and inward at the same time. UFO disclosures, Space Force, global defense theories, alien psychology, renewable energy failures, and the uncomfortable reality that humanity may project its own violence onto everything it fears. From James Talarico’s rise in Texas to conspiracy culture consuming modern politics, this episode explores what happens when decline becomes visible but power refuses to acknowledge it. 00:00 The Empire in Decline 00:28 China Warns the United States 02:34 Is the Dollar Losing Global Power 04:13 CEOs Follow Trump to Beijing 07:29 UFO Disclosure and Global Defense Theory 09:22 Would Aliens See Humans as the Threat 13:39 Why Humanity Projects Violence 15:31 Space Force and Trump’s First Term 17:27 Gas Prices and Energy Pressure 19:58 Suspending the Federal Gas Tax 20:56 Did America Ignore Renewable Energy 24:04 Wind Farms and Offshore Power 28:46 Tariffs, GDP, and Economic Decline 30:32 China Replaces the United States in Trade 33:13 Voting Maps and Disenfranchisement 35:18 ICE, Private Prisons, and Deportation Failures 38:25 Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Conspiracies 41:03 Trump Humiliated in China 46:05 Project 2025 and Authoritarian Drift 49:17 James Talarico’s Rise 52:19 MTG, MAGA, and Political Fractures 55:38 Grave Site Conspiracies Return 57:24 Israel, Gaza, and Nationalism 59:15 Xi Outmaneuvers Trump 01:00:23 Iran’s Messaging Strategy 01:01:12 The Decline Is Still Being Denied

15 May 2026 - 1 h 1 min
episode The Show Must Go On While the Market Smiles at the Funeral artwork

The Show Must Go On While the Market Smiles at the Funeral

The markets keep climbing while the cracks underneath the system keep getting harder to ignore. This week we break down America’s growing disconnect between economic reality and political theater, including MAGA’s struggle to govern beyond Trump, Supreme Court power battles, the fallout from Iran, fertilizer shortages, rising food costs, insider trading accusations, and why the economy feels completely detached from everyday life. From soaring stocks and collapsing public trust to global instability and institutional decay, the show keeps going while more people quietly realize the system is no longer functioning the way it used to. 00:00 Intro and primary election fallout 02:45 Can populism survive beyond Trump 06:05 MAGA, identity politics, and governing failure 08:50 Why the economy feels detached from reality 11:15 Inflation, oil prices, fertilizer shortages, and rising food costs 16:45 Rubio as press secretary and the transformation of the GOP 20:50 Supreme Court rulings and executive power 24:45 Governance, institutional trust, and political theater 31:05 Iran fallout, oil markets, and long term economic pressure 35:20 Sean Ryan, war narratives, and repeating Iraq era mistakes 36:50 America, trauma, and cultural decline 40:10 Iran ceasefire tensions and global trade instability 43:20 China, tariffs, and geopolitical positioning 45:30 Insider trading accusations and market manipulation 48:20 Pandemic fears, tourism decline, and World Cup concerns 52:10 Camping culture, generational shifts, and economic frustration 58:00 Millennials, recession cycles, and generational resentment 01:02:45 Tariff rulings, midterms, and market optics 01:05:00 Outro

8 May 2026 - 1 h 5 min
episode The System Is Not Failing It Is Working Exactly As Intended artwork

The System Is Not Failing It Is Working Exactly As Intended

The system is not failing. It is executing. From courts narrowing who can challenge voting laws to political pressure reshaping district maps in real time, the rules are being rewritten in plain sight. What looks like dysfunction is structured control tightening its grip. At the same time, reality itself is being managed. Economic signals are distorted, crises are spun, and even violence blurs into theater. Gas spikes, war escalation, and media narratives all point to the same pattern: instability is not an accident, it is leverage. Beneath it all is a deeper fracture. Trust in institutions is gone, but the mechanisms remain. Power no longer needs to hide intent, only to overwhelm resistance. And as the pressure builds, the cost is pushed downstream to the public, delayed, disguised, but inevitable. This is not collapse. It is design. 00:00 Intro and tone shift 01:30 Midwest gas spike and refinery fallout 05:00 Market manipulation and inflated performance narratives 06:00 Voting Rights Act shift and Section 2 impact 10:00 Intent vs interpretation in the Supreme Court 13:30 Gerrymandering and federal control over challenges 17:30 Political influence over state redistricting 18:30 Media theater and the staged narrative problem 22:00 The ballroom narrative and coordinated messaging 24:30 The “assassination attempt” inconsistencies 28:30 60 million user site and cultural decay discussion 32:00 Scale vs percentage and perceived vs real danger 36:00 Bias, lived experience, and systemic perspective 43:00 Personal story and understanding racial reality 49:00 Religion, control, and selective morality 52:00 War, oil, and global instability 56:00 Economic consequences and delayed impact 58:30 Final takeaway — the system is functioning as intended

1 May 2026 - 1 h 4 min
episode When Illusions Demand Scapegoats artwork

When Illusions Demand Scapegoats

This episode focuses on what happens when the appearance of control starts to break down. As pressure builds—falling approval, internal conflict, and visible instability—the response isn’t correction, it’s substitution. People get removed, blame gets redirected, and the system protects the image instead of fixing the problem. The discussion moves deeper into structure. Congress remains ineffective, districts are designed to avoid real competition, and accountability becomes selective. Even in heavily one-sided states, there are signs of resistance—not ideological shifts, but moments where individuals push back when the system is pushed too far. From there, the scope widens. Signals of instability show up in places outside traditional politics—predictive markets, global perception battles, and emerging pressures like AI expansion and infrastructure strain. These forces don’t follow party lines, and they expose how fragile the current structure actually is. The core idea is simple: when control isn’t real, it has to be performed. And when that performance starts to fail, it doesn’t correct itself—it looks for scapegoats. 00:00 – The tone shift: from confidence to collapse 02:00 – “You’re fired” politics returns 04:00 – Congress dysfunction and public distrust 07:00 – Gerrymandering and non-competitive districts 10:00 – Indiana politics and local accountability 12:30 – Leadership moments that actually mattered 15:00 – Power, corruption, and who should hold it 19:00 – Predictive markets and removal speculation 22:00 – Crypto, enforcement, and selective accountability 25:00 – Religion enters the political arena 27:00 – Data centers, AI, and resource strain 31:00 – Automation, job loss, and economic risk 35:00 – Global tensions and narrative warfare 40:00 – Policy contradictions and escalation risks 45:00 – Symbolism vs substance in leadership decisions 50:00 – Real-world consequences vs political theater 55:00 – Scarcity, waste, and system inefficiency 01:00:00 – Cultural shifts and long-term impact

24 Apr 2026 - 1 h 4 min
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En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
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